For @meelislubi and for the benefit of future viewers:
You're right about the distribution, but you're not completely correct about enc/dec.
Another person sends you a message using your public key to encrypt data so that only your private key can decrypt it. This ensures that only YOU can decrypt the data that is meant for you.
Whereas if you wanted to send a message, it's digitally signed with your private key instead of encrypted, so that your public key can certify that it came from you.
To say that the combined computing powers of ALL the machines in the world would not be able to crack PGP under the lifetime of the UNIVERSE is not just an overstatement, it's just plain wrong.
No it's not wrong. Almost every cipher used by PGP/GPG uses at least a 128 bit key. That's 2^128 possible keys. If you had a computer sized one inch in diameter that could try 1 billion keys a second and put one of these computers on every square inch of the Earth's land surface, it would still take over 50,000 years to find the key.
Of course, there is nowhere even close to this kind of computing power on earth. So, yes, it would take longer than the age of the universe.
For @meelislubi and for the benefit of future viewers:
You're right about the distribution, but you're not completely correct about enc/dec.
Another person sends you a message using your public key to encrypt data so that only your private key can decrypt it. This ensures that only YOU can decrypt the data that is meant for you.
Whereas if you wanted to send a message, it's digitally signed with your private key instead of encrypted, so that your public key can certify that it came from you.
AcentricOm 1 month ago
you just open a terminal ....where did you get that terminal..
tessachristopher1 1 year ago
To say that the combined computing powers of ALL the machines in the world would not be able to crack PGP under the lifetime of the UNIVERSE is not just an overstatement, it's just plain wrong.
karnvapenkrig 2 years ago
@karnvapenkrig
No it's not wrong. Almost every cipher used by PGP/GPG uses at least a 128 bit key. That's 2^128 possible keys. If you had a computer sized one inch in diameter that could try 1 billion keys a second and put one of these computers on every square inch of the Earth's land surface, it would still take over 50,000 years to find the key.
Of course, there is nowhere even close to this kind of computing power on earth. So, yes, it would take longer than the age of the universe.
b1naryd1g1t5 1 year ago
From 2:43 on you get public and private key confused. Private key is not distributed . Public key is.
Also Private key is used for encrypting and Public key for decrypting
meelislubi 3 years ago
agree, it is not distributed, and actually scheme is ok
adriaticsea123 2 years ago
Meelislubi - you have got it confused, not the video.
kxmadhu 2 years ago
Common you can already tell it by description:
Private key - it is private you do not distribute private things or do you.
Public key - as the word implies: it public, known to everyone.
meelislubi 2 years ago
Comment removed
AcentricOm 1 month ago
GPG rocks
velvethandofdarkness 3 years ago 2
Good video.
filippo333 3 years ago 2
Great Video. Thanks.
Laoch111 3 years ago